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‘Project Ghost' a policing victory against organized crime: Brampton Mayor Brown

‘Project Ghost' a policing victory against organized crime: Brampton Mayor Brown

Yahoo4 days ago
Brampton, Ont., Mayor Patrick Brown on Tuesday commented on 'Project Ghost", a year-long investigation into an organized crime group. Brown said "it was just not a policing victory, it's a community safety milestone for Brampton, Peel Region and the broader GTA. This investigation involved more than a dozen incidents, home invasions, stabbings, shootings and coordinated luxury vehicle thefts. These were not random acts, this was organized crime.'
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How AI-powered police forces watch your every move
How AI-powered police forces watch your every move

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

How AI-powered police forces watch your every move

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Police in San Francisco and Austin, Texas, have both circumvented restrictions by asking nearby or partnering law enforcement agencies to run facial recognition searches on their behalf, according to reporting by the Post last year. Meanwhile, at least one city is considering a new way to gain the use of facial recognition technology: by sharing millions of jail booking photos with private software companies in exchange for free access. Last week, the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported that the Milwaukee police department was considering such a swap, leveraging 2.5 million photos in return for $24,000 in search licenses. City officials say they would use the technology only in ongoing investigations, not to establish probable cause. Another way departments can skirt facial recognition rules is to use AI analysis that doesn't technically rely on faces. Last month, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Review noted the rise of ​​a tool called 'Track,' offered by the company Veritone. It can identify people using 'body size, gender, hair color and style, clothing, and accessories.' Notably, the algorithm can't be used to track by skin color. Because the system is not based on biometric data, it evades most laws intended to restrain police use of identifying technology. Additionally, it would allow law enforcement to track people whose faces may be obscured by a mask or a bad camera angle. In New York City, police are also exploring ways to use AI to identify people not just by face or appearance, but by behavior, too. 'If someone is acting out, irrational… it could potentially trigger an alert that would trigger a response from either security and/or the police department,' the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's Chief Security Officer Michael Kemper said in April, according to The Verge. 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Police and the legal system more broadly are also contending with increasingly sophisticated AI-generated material in the context of investigations and evidence in trials. Lawyers are growing worried about the potential for deepfake AI-generated videos, which could be used to create fake alibis or falsely incriminate people. In turn, this technology creates the possibility of a 'deepfake defense' that introduces doubt into even the clearest video evidence. Those concerns became even more urgent with the release of Google Gemini's hyper-realistic video engine last month. There are also questions about less duplicitous uses of AI in the courts. Last month, an Arizona court watched an impact statement of a murder victim, generated with AI by the man's family. The defense attorney for the man convicted in the case has filed an appeal, according to local news reports, questioning whether the emotional weight of the synthetic video influenced the judge's sentencing decision. This story was produced by The Marshall Project, a nonpartisan, nonprofit news organization that seeks to create and sustain a sense of national urgency about the U.S. criminal justice system, and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. Solve the daily Crossword

Justice Dept. Asked for 1-Day Sentence for Louisville Officer
Justice Dept. Asked for 1-Day Sentence for Louisville Officer

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time2 days ago

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Justice Dept. Asked for 1-Day Sentence for Louisville Officer

The leader of the Justice Department's civil rights unit asked a federal judge in Kentucky to sentence the former Louisville police officer who was convicted in the 2020 killing of Breonna Taylor to one day in jail. It was a significant reversal for a unit that spent years investigating and prosecuting the case in an effort to address racial disparities in policing. The officer, Brett Hankison, who was found guilty last year of violating Taylor's civil rights for firing several nonfatal shots through her window, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison. The judge will consider the government's request at a sentencing scheduled for next week. The official who submitted the request, Harmeet Dhillon, is a longtime Republican leader who was appointed to the role by President Trump. She suggested in her filing that the Biden administration's prosecution of the former officer was excessive. In other Trump administration news: The president was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, a common vein condition, after he sought medical care for swelling in his legs. Read the letter from Trump's doctor. Current and former staff members said there was a pervasive fear inside inspectors general offices after Trump fired several watchdogs. Congress is set to claw back billions for aid and public media The House is planning to vote before the end of the week to approve a White House request to claw back $9 billion in congressionally approved spending. Early this morning, the Senate's Republican majority narrowly approved the bill over the objections of two members of the party who said it abdicated the legislative branch's power of the purse. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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